The europeanCommissionbeneathCompetition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager certainlymeans business. These days it issued not a single but two notices related to ongoing investigations of tech giants Apple and Amazon and the waythey are notpaying outwhat exactly isdue in taxes. The end resultis really a doozy. The EC says that Eire has unsuccessfulto collectas much as €13 billion in taxes from iphone maker Apple – approximately $15 billion in today’s forex. And Luxembourg gave e-commerce large Amazon (which bases its European HQ there) illegal tax benefitsworth €250 million – or $294 million in today’s forex.

Goingfollowing the Member States – and notthe businessesthemselves – is aninterestingmovethat wasbroadlynotedto bewithin theworksleadingup toright now – and it has been an ongoing concernfor a long timeat this point. Indeeda number ofwhich isreflected in Vestager’s official statements around thescenario.

“Ireland needs torecuperateup to13 billion euros in unlawfulPoint outassist from Apple,” she mentioned, referring to this 2016 ruling on the tax problemto themost precious tech company inside theglobe. “However, more than1yearonce theFee adopted this decision, Ireland has nonetheless not recovered the cash, also not in part. We of course understand thatrecovery in particularcasesmight be much morecomplex than in other individuals, and we’reusuallyable toaid. But Member States must make sufficientprogressto revivecompetitors. That is why we’ve gotthese daysdecided to refer Irelandfor the EU Court docket for failing to put into action our choice.”

And on Luxembourg/Amazon, the tax breaks thenation gave to Amazon have been overlooking the company’s profits, she noted.

“Luxembourg gave unlawful tax rewards to Amazon. Because of this, almost3 quarters of Amazon’s profitshad been not taxed. Put simply, Amazon was permitted topayfourtimesmuch less tax than other nearbycompaniestopicto theexact samenational tax principles,” she saidinside astatement. “This is illegalunder EU Statehelprules. Member States can not give selective tax rewards to multinational teamsthat are notaccessible to others.”

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iPhone 8 Plus review: still massive – but not in a good way

The he iPhone 8 Furthermoremay have some extravagantcameratricks up its sleeve, but can it bereallyreally worthbuying its cumbersomeframein advance of its sleeker rivals or perhaps thepotentialin the iPhone X?

Like its smaller non-Plus sibling, the design of the iPhone 8 Plus has hardlychangedsinceit waslaunched in 2014 with all the iPhone sixFurthermore, but it has aged even worse. The iPhone sixPlus was skinny but fairlybroad and tall for any smartphone using afive.5in display in 2014, with huge bezels along with a chunky bestand bottom.